around the young ones every year and slosh a bucket of water on
them when the rains are late. Remembering.
The old family home place on the allotment in Oklahoma has a
pecan tree shading what remains of the house. I imagine Grammy
pouring nuts out to prepare them and one rolling away to a
welcoming spot at the edge of the dooryard. Or maybe she paid
her debt to the trees by planting a handful in her garden right then
and there.
Thinking back to that old story again, it strikes me that the boys
in the pecan grove were very wise to carry home all that they could:
nut trees don’t make a crop every year, but rather produce at
unpredictable intervals. Some years a feast, most years a famine, a
boom and bust cycle known as mast fruiting. Unlike juicy fruits and
berries, which invite you to eat them right away before they spoil,
nuts protect themselves with a hard, almost stony shell and a
green, leathery husk. The tree does not mean for you to eat them
right away with juice dripping down your chin. They are designed to
be food for winter, when you need fat and protein, heavy calories to
keep you warm. They are safety for hard times, the embryo of
survival. So rich is the reward that the contents are protected in a
vault, double locked, a box inside a box. This protects the embryo
within and its food supply, but it also virtually guarantees that the
nut will be squirreled away someplace safe.
The only way through the shell is a lot of work, and a squirrel
would be unwise to sit gnawing it in the open where a hawk would
gladly take advantage of its preoccupation. Nuts are designed to be
brought inside, to save for later in a chipmunk’s cache, or in the
root cellar of an Oklahoma cabin. In the way of all hoards, some will
surely be forgotten—and then a tree is born.
For mast fruiting to succeed in generating new forests, each tree
grace
(Grace)
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